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...Parkinson's disease might result from toxins in the environment. The new study, published in the December issue of NatureNeuroscience, does not prove that the pesticide used in the test, rotenone, causes Parkinson's in humans. But scientists...

...women against males the same ages. No one passed those smell tests. The results, published Monday online in NatureNeuroscience, suggest that female sex hormones explain the gender difference. - Knight Ridder Newspapers

...but active stage known as rapid-eye movement, or REM, sleep. The study was published in the August issue of NatureNeuroscience and was led by Pierre Maquet of the University of Liege in Belgium. Animal studies had shown similar results...

...since we found this result." Gage is senior author of the study, published in the March issue of the journal NatureNeuroscience. The result was a surprise, and it's not clear how to explain it, he said. The study followed up on previous...

...postdoctoral fellow Jean-Pierre Montmayeur, who found the gene, report their work in the May issue of the journal NatureNeuroscience. Dr. Robert Margolskee of the Hughes institute and the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York, said he also...

...political ideology to a basic neurocognitive mechanism for self-regulation." If you look up the work online in NatureNeuroscience ($30 for a two-page article), it sure looks like science, what with graphs and formulae and language like...

...efficiently as thick nerve fibers, which are also found in skin. The new research, published in the current issue of NatureNeuroscience, indicates that while the thick fibers rapidly shoot electrical signals to the somatosensory cortex of the brain...

...eye is decidedly mixed, said Ione Fine, lead author of a study appearing in the September issue of the journal NatureNeuroscience. May can identify simple shapes and colors. He can interpret objects in motion. He can spy faraway peaks. He...

...there were also some differences. Riepe and colleagues describe the results in the April issue of the journal NatureNeuroscience. One difference involved the hippocampus, a banana-shaped structure deep in the brain that is crucial for navigation...

...there were also some differences. Riepe and colleagues describe the results in the April issue of the journal NatureNeuroscience. One difference involved the hippocampus, a banana-shaped structure deep in the brain that is crucial for navigation...